The Philosophy of the Act and the Phenomenology of Perception: Mead and Merleau-Ponty

Southern Journal of Philosophy 28 (1):77-90 (1990)
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Abstract

Mead and Merleau-Ponty each portray the perceptual field as a field of spatially and temporally located, ontologically "thick" or resisting objects which are essentially related to the horizon of world, which allow for the very structure of the sensing which gives access to them, and whose manner of emergence undercuts the problematics of the subject-object split. This essay surveys this perceptual field as a focus for eliciting their more fundamental shared understanding of the dimensions of human activity which underlie its emergence

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Patrick Bourgeois
Loyola University, New Orleans

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